Yo! Gong Xi, Gong Xi!!! Happy Chinese New Year! May Your Wishes Bloom Like Flowers In Spring, May Your Life Shine Like The Summer Sun, May Money Shower In Your Life Like Winter Snow & All Your Worries Drop Like Autumn Leaves, a Chinese can be what he wants to be like Bruce Lee, I wish all y'all better health & WEALTH, HUAT baby HUAT from Icey
1. Dr. Dre Intro 2. The City (Feat. Kendrick Lamar) 3. Drug Test (Feat. Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg & Sly) 4. Martians Vs Goblins (Feat. Tyler, The Creator & Lil Wayne)
5. Red Nation (Feat. Lil Wayne)
6. Dr. Dre 1 7. Good Girls Go Bad (Feat. Drake) 8. Ricky 9. The Good, The Bad, The Ugly 10. Heavy Artillery (Feat. Rick Ross & Beanie Sigel) 11. Paramedics (Feat. Young Jeezy) 12. Speakers On Blast (Feat. E-40 & Big Boi) 13. Hello (Feat. Lloyd) 14. All The Way Gone (Feat. Mario & Wale) 15. Pot Of Gold (Feat. Chris Brown)
16. Dr. Dre 2 17. All I Know (Feat. Lu Breeze) 18. Born In The Trap 19. Mama Knows (Feat. Nelly Furtado) 20. California Dream 21. Dr. Dre Outro
DJ Premier’s Top 25 Albums of 2011 Like every year DJ Premier presents to you his top 25 albums of a year, also in 2010 he did that. There’s always a big commotion around it but check out Premos top 25 of 2011:
Rank: 25. Large Professor & Neek The Exotic – Still On The Hustle 24. Edo G – A Face In The Crowd 23. Ill Bill & Vinnie Paz – Heavy Metal Kings 22. Greneberg – Greneberg 21. Action Bronson & Statik Selektah – Well Done
20. Apathy – Honkey Kong 19. The Away Team – Scars And Stripes 18. Kanye West & Jay-Z – Watch The Throne 17. Torae – For The Record 16. Bumpy Knuckles & Statik Selektah – Lyrical Workout 15. Common – The Dreamer, The Believer 14. Maffew Ragazino Sr. – Rhyme Pays 13. Bad Meets Evil – Hell: The Sequel 12. Drake – Take Care 11. Statik Selektah – Population Control
10. Random Axe – Random Axe 09. Malcolm And Martin – Life Doesn’t Frighten Me 08. Royce da 5’9″ – Success Is Certain 07. Phonte – Charity Starts At Home 06. 50 Cent – The Big 10 05. Reks – R.E.K.S. 04. M.O.P. & Snowgoons – Sparta 03. Evidence – Cats & Dogs 02. 9th Wonder – The Wonder Years 01. Game – The R.E.D. Album Source: djpremierblog.com
The Game's Red Nation featured in 'Contraband' Trailer
1. "Waiting" Jeezy opens "TM:103" by stating the obvious to the blocks and blogs, they've been "waiting on 103."
2. "What I Do (Just LIke That)" Jeezy gives us a play-by-play track of his day to day on the trippy Drumma Boy-produced track.
3. "OJ" feat. Fabolous and Jadakiss Young correlates the clearance of street hustling with O.J. Simpson' s relieve of charge. Two NY finests join in on the wordplay.
4. "Nothing" "Nothing" is a direct message to the haters: Jeezy made himself into something.
5. "Way Too Gone" feat. Future Jeezy boasts his champagne living has him gone, over Mike Will outerspace soundscapes.
6. "Supafreak" feat. 2 Chainz An austere banger in the vein of "Recession's" "By The Way," but 2 Chainz sounds out of place.
7. "All We Do" "All we do is smoke and fuck, smoke and fuck," Jeezy rasps, quickly explaining why "TM103" took so long to finish.
8. "Leave You Alone" feat. Ne-Yo Piano loops, subtle synths and classiness courtesy of Ne-Yo make this a winner.
9. "Everythang" Vivid descriptions of Jeezy's hustling days are offset by a celebratory but forgettable hook.
10. "Trapped" feat. Jill Scott Ms. Scott and Jeezy spar over J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League's opulent production, and an unexpected collaboration pays dividends.
11. "F.A.M.E." feat. T.I. Stunning single features upfront introspection from two Atlanta heavyweights, but the beat seals the deal.
12. "I Do" feat. Jay-Z and Andre 3000 "International Player's Anthem," four years later. Jeezy combs the crowd for a bride, while Hov and Three-Stacks toast l-o-v-e.
13. "Higher Learning" feat. Snoop Dogg, Devin The Dude and Mitchelle'l Shockingly, a song called "Higher Learning" with Snoop Dogg is about weed. Soulful paean to that green is a serviceable posse cut.
14. "This One's For You" feat. Trick Daddy Young salutes his fans, while Trick Daddy returns and bemoans young dudes wearing "tight shirts and skinnies."
YOUNG JEEZY TM103 OFFICIAL ALBUM RELEASE PARTY + LIVE PERFORMANCE AT KING OF DIAMONDS
Young Jeezy Performs "I Do" and "Lose My Mind" Medley
Young Jeezy - TM:103 Listening Session At Patchwerk Studios
Jeezy's Bio: No matter what is being supplied, a hustler is only as good as his word. With Atlanta serving up some of the hottest product in the rap game, native son Young Jeezy stands as one of the most exciting merchants of cool to emerge in years. Thanks to underground testimonials like "Air Forces" and "Chuuch," Jeezy's street swagger and authentic style has quickly made believers out of some the biggest players in the game, from Fabolous to P. Diddy. In his native Atlanta, and throughout the south, Young Jeezy has created nothing short of a movement. Now the world will get to find out what insiders have been buzzing about when his Def Jam debut, Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101 drops this summer.
Like many hustlers on the mic, rapping wasn't in Jeezy's original game plan. As CEO of Corporate Thug Entertainment, Jeezy was content to stack his paper from the background.
"Before music I was just trying to survive out this motherfucker. I had other artists, some local cats off the street, but it didn't work out," explains the twenty-five year old Georgia native. "So I just decided to do it myself. Ain't nobody gonna go as hard as you gonna go. I saw the bigger picture at the time. I have a way with words and I know how to hustle."
Having lost many things in his life-- family, friends and time (a prison bid that he doesn't like to give too much light)--Jeezy had a sense of urgency about his music. So he hit the mixtape circuit with exclusive tracks recorded with longtime collaborator Shawty Red. With over 100,000 mixtapes and over 200,000 Trap Or Die DVD's sold in a little more than a year, Def Jam decided to invest in the youngster and made him the most recent signee to the label.
"Basically, I'm a real nigga so I can relate more to a lot of cats," Jeezy says of his appeal. " I don't just do music for the clubs, I do music for the struggle. I do music for everyday niggas, the kids who ain't got no sense of direction. I'm trying to restore some of the morals back into the game, as far as the street."
What sets Young Jeezy's music apart is his ability to bring color and flash to a story that has been told so many times before. He's a true digital age artist who doesn't need 16 bars to develop a picture in your head. When he snaps off a verse the image is simple enough for everyone to feel it instantly.
"In one night ten bitches, eight bottles of Cris/forty grand just to make you stare at my wrist" he rattles off on his hit "Air Forces." Jeezy's undeniable swagger has made everyone from UGK's Bun B to Sean "P. Diddy" Combs stand up and take notice. But it's the folks grinding from day-to-day that will get the most out of Jeezy's street scriptures.
"I'm just real to myself. Just believing in what I can do. If you have goals it gives a nigga something to be motivated about," he says. "We stood on the same concrete at one time. With the same mindframe. My stuff is to motivate them. Letting you know where I'm from and what I've seen so you can get something out of it."
The streets responded by snatching up his mixtapes by the trunkload. But now that he has fans on the hook, Jeezy is ready to reel them in slow with this full length.
"I did the mixtape run, but on mixtapes you can't really give people you," he reasons. " I think people will really relate to the album. I ain't come into this for no broads or a wristwatch or a car. I came into this shit for a spot. I'mma reality kicker. I'm not gonna tell you what you wanna hear because it sounds good, I'mma give it to you raw."
Songs like the revealing "Let Me Talk To 'Em" show Jeezy apologizing for many of the wrongs in his life and attempting to set the next generation straight about the dark side of life in the traps. "A lot of the cats I looked up to that bought me school clothes and things I lost them," he says. "That's why I'm here now."
Setting the backdrop for his reality are producers Mannie Fresh - who's "Boom Boom Clap" powers Let's Get It's searing first single "And The What" - Jazze Pha and Shawty Red to name a few. The guest line up is a who's who of southern rap, but there will be plenty of Young Jeezy to bump from the coups to the corners.
"My whole thing is I want to restore some more morals back to this street shit," he concludes. "Niggas listen to niggas who rap. I just wanna feed the streets."
6. Point Blanc ft. MC Yan – “Fate” Another great song with another great message, “Fate” explains that your fate is within your grasp; you have the ability to change it. Point Blanc, another famous rapper, and MC Yan, from LMF, have voices that go really well together. Also, the traditional Chinese sounds in the background mixed with the rapping is very unique and surprisingly easy on the ears.
Zero are represented as where everything begins, ends, and definite unlimited. The Point is represented as Went we talk we always has a point, we don't waste our words. The 'O' are represent to make people think, most our beats are on loops, life cycle, repeat, noted, what goes around comes around, refresh, shock/surprise/Awe(O)some, put holes in your face.
This band got very much variety in styles and music genres. We do music that: Chillax, Think, Metaphor, Wordplay, Fight, Mosh, Message, Lesson, Love, Instrumental.